
Ek Deewane Ki Deewaniyat
- Director
- Milap Zaveri
- Studio
- Desi Movies Factory
- Release Date
- 21 October 2025
- Running Time
- 141 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹25.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹112.03 Cr
Review
Ek Deewane Ki Deewaniyat stumbles into familiar territory, arriving at a moment when Hindi cinema should have moved decisively beyond the obsessive-lover archetype that defined the previous decade. The film presents itself as sincere romantic drama but constantly undermines that ambition by chasing mass-market validation, creating a dissonance that permeates every scene. What prevents it from being a complete misfire are the committed performances from its leads—Harshvardhan Rane grounds his troubled protagonist with genuine emotional weight, while Sonam Bajwa provides necessary counterbalance with both vulnerability and screen presence. The musical moments occasionally elevate the material, offering glimpses of the film's latent potential to move beyond formula.
These islands of quality, however, are swallowed by a screenplay that progressively trades character depth for spectacle and social-media moments. The narrative begins with modest promise but devolves into predictable melodrama, prioritizing viral-moment construction over meaningful exploration of its central premise. The direction lacks any distinctive perspective, applying surface-level sincerity to material that feels decidedly out of step with contemporary sensibilities. What could have been a provocative examination of modern romantic obsession instead settles into being a sleek, ultimately hollow exercise—a film that mistakes earnestness for depth and conflates emotional volume with emotional truth.
Rating: 5
Storyline
So there's this politician named Vikramaditya who's basically being prepared to run an entire state by his dad. His childhood was pretty rough though—his mom passed away when he was born, and his father's never really gotten over it, making Vikramaditya grow up thinking he deserves whatever he wants, no matter what. On the surface he seems like this wealthy, powerful guy living the dream life, but deep down he's got some serious emotional baggage that messes with how he treats people.
One day he spots this famous Bollywood actress named Adaa and immediately becomes completely obsessed with her. He's already planned out their whole future together in his head, even though she's a totally independent woman who has zero interest in him and tells him straight up that she's not interested. But Vikramaditya just can't handle rejection—like, he literally cannot accept the word "no" from her.
So instead of backing off like a normal person would, he starts using his political connections to make her life miserable. He threatens to ruin her film career, sabotages her movie projects, and even uses goons to harass her on the streets. At one point he actually manages to get one of her films banned by claiming it offends people's religious beliefs. The movie tries to show he's not totally heartless—he helps street kids go to school and stuff—but his behavior toward Adaa keeps getting darker and more controlling.




